Current:Home > ContactFeeling crowded yet? The Census Bureau estimates the world’s population has passed 8 billion -Capitatum
Feeling crowded yet? The Census Bureau estimates the world’s population has passed 8 billion
SafeX Pro Exchange View
Date:2025-04-06 07:21:42
The human species has topped 8 billion, with longer lifespans offsetting fewer births, but world population growth continues a long-term trend of slowing down, the U.S. Census Bureau said Thursday.
The bureau estimates the global population exceeded the threshold Sept. 26, a precise date the agency said to take with a grain of salt.
The United Nations estimated the number was passed 10 months earlier, having declared November 22, 2022, the “Day of 8 Billion,” the Census Bureau pointed out in a statement.
The discrepancy is due to countries counting people differently — or not at all. Many lack systems to record births and deaths. Some of the most populous countries, such as India and Nigeria, haven’t conducted censuses in over a decade, according to the bureau.
While world population growth remains brisk, growing from 6 billion to 8 billion since the turn of the millennium, the rate has slowed since doubling between 1960 and 2000.
People living to older ages account for much of the recent increase. The global median age, now 32, has been rising in a trend expected to continue toward 39 in 2060.
Countries such as Canada have been aging with declining older-age mortality, while countries such as Nigeria have seen dramatic declines in deaths of children under 5.
Fertility rates, or the rate of births per woman of childbearing age, are meanwhile declining, falling below replacement level in much of the world and contributing to a more than 50-year trend, on average, of slimmer increases in population growth.
The minimum number of such births necessary to replace both the father and mother for neutral world population is 2.1, demographers say. Almost three-quarters of people now live in countries with fertility rates around or below that level.
Countries with fertility rates around replacement level include India, Tunisia and Argentina.
About 15% of people live in places with fertility rates below replacement level. Countries with low fertility rates include Brazil, Mexico, the U.S. and Sweden, while those with very low fertility rates include China, South Korea and Spain.
Israel, Ethiopia and Papua New Guinea rank among countries with higher-than-replacement fertility rates of up to 5. Such countries have almost one-quarter of the world’s population.
Only about 4% of the world’s population lives in countries with fertility rates above 5. All are in Africa.
Global fertility rates are projected to decline at least through 2060, with no country projected to have a rate higher than 4 by then, according to the bureau.
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Small twin
- Soldiers in Myanmar rape, behead and kill 17 people in rampage, residents say
- Luis Alberto Urrea pays tribute to WWII's forgotten volunteers — including his mother
- 3 new books in translation blend liberation with darkness
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- John Goodman tells us the dark secret behind all his lovable characters
- Juilliard fires former chair after sexual misconduct investigation
- Three great songs for your next road trip
- Residents in Alaska capital clean up swamped homes after an ice dam burst and unleashed a flood
- Cold Justice Sneak Peek: Investigators Attempt to Solve the 1992 Murder of Natasha Atchley
Ranking
- A steeplechase record at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Then a proposal. (He said yes.)
- South Korea, U.S. shirk North Korea's threats of counteractions, carry on planning for joint war games
- Brendan Fraser Rides the Wave to Success With Big 2023 SAG Awards Win
- Remembering Tina Turner
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- After years of ever-shrinking orchestras, some Broadway musicals are going big
- After years of ever-shrinking orchestras, some Broadway musicals are going big
- Françoise Gilot, the famed artist who loved and then left Picasso, is dead at 101
Recommendation
Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
Ida B. Wells Society internships mired by funding issues, says Nikole Hannah-Jones
Treat Yo Self to This Sweet Parks and Recreation Reunion at the SAG Awards 2023
Vanity Fair's Radhika Jones talks Rupert Murdoch and Little House on the Prairie
Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
FBI investigating suspicious death of a woman on a Carnival cruise ship
Actor Treat Williams, star of 'Hair' and 'Everwood', is killed in a motorcycle crash
After years of ever-shrinking orchestras, some Broadway musicals are going big